such rooms, and at all such times and hours, and under such restrictions as the Trus-tees or other lawfiil managers of the said library may deem . expedient or reasonable, each and all ofsaid books so bequeathed, or so purchased, shall be fireely ac

original languages ; which they did by this ensuingiitional act ; and forthwith all or most of the lawbooks were turned intoglish (according to the act a little before, for turning proceedings of law> English) and the rest written afterwards in the

, ia our judgment, is tnperior to an j voA. now, m print." N. Y. Evening Pan.I " Among the American law wrilera, who are qnoted with approTal in the Eng-lish Coart«, probablv none rank higher than Mr. Greenleaf ; and this new loluma1111 doabiless be

oon, was hei'e cured of the consumptionbrought upon him by the imprecation of Daksha, his father-in-law(Maha-bh., S'alya-p. 201 1; Vishnu-p. p. 561). A tirtJia is a place ofpilgrimage, generally on the bank of some sacred stream, or near someholy spr

CTSheart DONATEHELPTERMSJOBSVOLUNTEERPEOPLEpersonSign InuploadsearchFull text of "Principles of the law of wills, with selected cases"See other formatsGoogleThis is a digital copy of a book that was preserved for generations on Hbrary shelves before

oks above-mentioned. The Dherma-Shastra alone consists of above ten largevolumes, comprehending all lawbooks ofauthority.-}-But it would be useless to recapitulate* An English translation of the Ramayuna has beenexecuted by Drs. Carey and Marshman,